Splended coverage of a wonderful country place. One correction, though: it is a log HOUSE, not a log CABIN. The distinction is that the logs of a log house have been "planked," or cut to be flat, on the exterior and interior sides; and the logs are joined at the corners with one or other of several variations of sometimes complex notches. That took a lot of skilled work and indicates that the builder intended the structure to last for a long time (which it has). In contrast, a log cabin is constructed of round logs that are simply saddle-notched at the corners; this is more temporary shelter. (One of the scholarly books on log houses is THE UPLAND SOUTH by Terry Jordan.)